Recession has parents asking if thousands being spent is worth
it

updated 1:19 p.m. ET, Wed., Jan. 27, 2010
DAVIE, Fla. - Ooopsy the Clown threw in a bubble machine for the
monkey-themed party marking Nicholas Castillo's first birthday. She
usually charges extra, but what's a clown to do in a recession that
has some parents throwing less extravagant celebrations for their
kids?
Ooopsy, aka Amy Tinoco, estimates the entertainment company she
co-owns took in about $80,000 before taxes and expenses last year.
That's about $46,000 less than in 2008. She used to do an average
of 12 parties a weekend. Now it's down to three.
"I didn't realize how good it was," said Tinoco, who wore a red
wig, multicolored skirt and blue clown shoes for Nicholas' bash.
"It's a huge difference. I have a lot of people telling me they are
having a party, they are just not having entertainment and
catering."
Party planners and parents around the country have seen a pullback,
though they agreed some will always take kid birthdays over the
top. David Tutera, a New York-based event planner, said his clients
still want to have parties, but they're not making them quite so
lavish.
"I think they are not getting the $5,000 birthday cake for their
5-year-old," he said. "They are still going to have the fun theme
party. ... It's not going to be so opulent."
Chandra Turner, executive editor of Parents magazine, said many kid
birthday parties were so huge they were more like mini
weddings.
"I think that parents for a while there were doing everything they
could to make the birthday parties as amazing, and extravagant as
possible," she said.
The magazine recently did an informal study of the subject, asking
2,264 readers how much they expected to spend on their children's
next birthday. Twenty-six percent said less than $75, 49 percent
said $75 to $200, 19 percent said $200 or more, and 6 percent said
they didn't know.
Extravagance in kid birthday parties, as in life, clearly means
different things to different moms.
Lisa Castillo, Nicholas' mom, went well beyond any of the
magazine's dollar figures, but she did cut back her initial plans.
She estimates that she probably spent under $1,000, switching to
pizza over a full Italian buffet to help trim expenses. There were
personalized, laminated placemats for some younger guests,
custom-made crayon holders in the goodie bags and a monogrammed bib
for Nicholas.
"It's my kid's first birthday," she said. "I kept saying to my
husband, 'This party's for me.'"
The birthday boy squirmed on his mother's lap as Tinoco led the
excited young audience in a round of "Head, Shoulders, Knees and
Toes," and wowed them with a bear puppet. Later, Nicholas
entertained himself by licking frosting off his fingers from his
high chair. The bubbles were a huge hit all around.
"That's what I love about kids, they are happy with the simplest
things," Tinoco said as she twisted a balloon into a sword for a
little boy.
Children's parties were so out-of-control that some parents in St.
Paul, Minn., formed a citizen action group to urge restraint and
created the Web site birthdayswithoutpressure.com. "I think
generally, it seems to me people are trying to tone it down a
little bit," said Julie Printz, one of the founders.
She remembers the stress of trying to plan the perfect party for
her oldest daughter's sixth birthday six years ago. Printz, a
mother of two daughters, was up at 2 a.m. cutting out foam
frames.
Click for related content
TODAY moms: Cutting down that invite list Give your
kid a bash within a reasonable budget These days, Printz allows
them to celebrate with one or two friends. They get to pick
something to do. She pushes for slumber parties.
Karen Sternheimer, a sociology professor at the University of
Southern California, said people are having fewer children and
they're having them later in life, which seems to have some parents
reliving their own childhoods through their kids.
"I think we have this idea of what childhood means and it's usually
very commercialized," she said. "I think part of that is for the
parents themselves. A lot of parents today, their primary social
network, if not through work, is through their kids."
Article Source:
MSNBC
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